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Individuals' diet diversity influences gut microbial diversity in two freshwater fish (threespine stickleback and Eurasian perch)
Authors:Daniel I Bolnick  Lisa K Snowberg  Philipp E Hirsch  Christian L Lauber  Rob Knight  J Gregory Caporaso  Richard Svanbäck
Institution:1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Section of Integrative Biology, University of Texas at Austin, , Austin, TX, 78712 USA;2. Section of Integrative Biology, University of Texas at Austin, , Austin, TX, 78712 USA;3. Program Man‐Society‐Environment, University of Basel, , Basel, CH‐4051 Switzerland;4. Department of Ecology and Genetics, Uppsala University, , Uppsala, SE‐752 36 Sweden;5. Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, University of Colorado, , Boulder, CO, 80309‐0216 USA;6. Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and BioFrontiers Institute, University of Colorado, , Boulder, CO, 80309‐0215 USA;7. Department of Biological Sciences, Northern Arizona University, , Flagstaff, AZ, 86011 USA;8. Institute for Genomics and Systems Biology, Argonne National Laboratory, , Argonne, IL, 60439 USA
Abstract:Vertebrates' diets profoundly influence the composition of symbiotic gut microbial communities. Studies documenting diet‐microbiota associations typically focus on univariate or categorical diet variables. However, in nature individuals often consume diverse combinations of foods. If diet components act independently, each providing distinct microbial colonists or nutrients, we expect a positive relationship between diet diversity and microbial diversity. We tested this prediction within each of two fish species (stickleback and perch), in which individuals vary in their propensity to eat littoral or pelagic invertebrates or mixtures of both prey. Unexpectedly, in most cases individuals with more generalised diets had less diverse microbiota than dietary specialists, in both natural and laboratory populations. This negative association between diet diversity and microbial diversity was small but significant, and most apparent after accounting for complex interactions between sex, size and diet. Our results suggest that multiple diet components can interact non‐additively to influence gut microbial diversity.
Keywords:Diet mixing     Gasterosteus aculeatus     generalist  individual specialisation  microbiota     Perca fluviatilis     perch  stable isotopes  threespine stickleback
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